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Feds to hold Senate elections this fall: Klein
EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Ralph Klein says Prime Minister Stephen Harper has promised to hold Canada's first official Senate elections this fall.
But Klein says the prime minister did not indicate how the elections would be carried out, which leaves open the question of whether the provinces will be responsible for electing senators.
Electing senators was a key promise for Harper during the recent federal election campaign, but he surprised many Canadians by naming Quebec's Michael Fortier to the Senate as part of the recent cabinet appointments.
Alberta has asked voters in three successive elections to choose would-be senators, however the federal government has never honoured those results.
Klein says the prime minister also promised at a meeting with the premiers last Friday in Ottawa to give the next available Senate seat to Bert Brown, one of four senators-in-waiting chosen by Alberta voters in the 2004 provincial election.
But the Alberta premier says Harper has decided not to pursue other Senate reform measures because it would be problematic to make the required changes to the Constitution.
Feds to hold Senate elections this fall: Klein
EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Ralph Klein says Prime Minister Stephen Harper has promised to hold Canada's first official Senate elections this fall.
But Klein says the prime minister did not indicate how the elections would be carried out, which leaves open the question of whether the provinces will be responsible for electing senators.
Electing senators was a key promise for Harper during the recent federal election campaign, but he surprised many Canadians by naming Quebec's Michael Fortier to the Senate as part of the recent cabinet appointments.
Alberta has asked voters in three successive elections to choose would-be senators, however the federal government has never honoured those results.
Klein says the prime minister also promised at a meeting with the premiers last Friday in Ottawa to give the next available Senate seat to Bert Brown, one of four senators-in-waiting chosen by Alberta voters in the 2004 provincial election.
But the Alberta premier says Harper has decided not to pursue other Senate reform measures because it would be problematic to make the required changes to the Constitution.